Kenya’s Odinga: I won’t run if commission not reformed

Raila Odinga tells Al Jazeera he will not participate in elections next year if electoral commission is not overhauled.

Kenya opposition leaders and supporters teargased after attempting to enter electoral commision offices by force
Kenya police try to disperse supporters and leaders of the Coalition for Reforms and Democracy, led by Raila Odinga [Daniel Irungu/EPA]

Opposition leader and former Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga has said that he will not participate in elections next year if the country’s electoral commission is not reformed.

Odinga told Al Jazeera’s Head to Head in an interview that he was worried about the potential for violence to break out during the poll, adding that there would be “no reason for us to participate” if the commission was not overhauled.

Police fired tear gas at Odinga and other opposition members when they marched on the commission in the capital Nairobi last month in a protest calling for it to be dissolved.

Next year’s elections come a decade after violence erupted in the aftermath of a disputed election in 2007, killing 1,300 people and forcing 650,000 from their homes.

Odinga ran for president then and later said the result was fixed. He was subsequently named prime minister in a unity government and occupied that post until 2013, when he stood unsuccessfully again, losing to Uhuru Kenyatta.

“We need to address factors that may lead us to a state of violence that we witnessed in 2008,” he said.

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“We will not go into the gallows. If the Electoral Commission is not properly reformed there would definitely be no reason for us to participate in the coming elections.”

On the recent collapse of an International Criminal Court (ICC) trial of Deputy Vice President William Ruto – Odinga’s ally in 2007 –  for crimes against humanity, Odinga said it would have “been better for Ruto to have gone through a full trial and then discharged for lack of evidence” rather than a mistrial.

Resisting bribes

Odinga criticised the Kenyan government for what he called an “intolerable amount of interference” in the case, and the African Union for having a “hypocritical relationship” with the court, from which it has previously threatened to withdraw.

“The AU have not been honest with themselves because they are saying that ICC targets African leaders, and I’ve said it’s hogwash … Most of the African leaders who were before the ICC have been referred there by Africans themselves,” he said.


READ MORE: ICC dismisses case against Kenya’s Ruto


Odinga also discussed corruption during the interview, which took place at Britain’s Oxford Union.

He said “every Kenyan”, including himself, has needed to pay a bribe to get things done.

“The question is ‘when’, it’s not ‘if’,” he said.

Odinga said he was offered bribes when in government but resisted taking them, pledging to jail corrupt officials if elected president.

The full interview will be available here on May 6. at 20:00 GMT and repeated on the 7th of May at 12:00GMT, the 8th of May at 01:00 GMT and 9th of May at 06:00 GMT.

Source: Al Jazeera